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Big Alien Tech Problem: Why We Haven’t Found Extraterrestrials
Over the past century, humanity has experienced a remarkable technological leap. This progress has fostered the belief that our technological potential is boundless. By extension, this assumption has been applied to extraterrestrial civilizations as well.
Combined with the discovery of numerous potentially habitable planets, it leaves scientists perplexed—why haven’t we found evidence of intelligent alien life?
If advanced alien civilizations could rapidly expand across the cosmos due to their technological prowess, why haven’t we encountered them?
According to a new hypothesis published in the journal Futures, the reason may be a universal cap on the technological development of intelligent species.
This limit, significantly lower than the ability to colonize a galaxy, could explain the absence of alien civilizations in our observations.
Scientists suggest that we may never encounter an interstellar alien civilization, or even a signal from one, because every civilization in the universe likely hits a technological ceiling.
Looking at human history—marked by the rise and fall of civilizations, technological breakthroughs, and the absence of visible intelligent aliens—researchers propose that the technological capabilities of all advanced species, including humans, are not infinite.
Naturally, there are physical limits to what we can achieve, such as the inability to travel faster than light. While we’ve developed technology that lets us explore the universe at subatomic levels and vast scales, the cost of pushing these boundaries is becoming prohibitively expensive, scientists argue.
The authors of the study point out that the last major breakthroughs in understanding the universe, such as the theory of relativity and quantum mechanics, occurred nearly a century ago.
Although we now have a much deeper understanding of phenomena like black holes, these advancements haven’t had the same profound impact on our technological capabilities as earlier discoveries did.
As the cost of developing new technology escalates, humanity may eventually decide that pursuing further advancements—ones that could enable us to become an interstellar civilization—is simply not worth the investment. The hypothesis suggests that this same scenario could play out for other intelligent species.
Voyager-1 is more than 24 billion km (15 billion miles) away, so distant, its radio messages take fully 22.5 hours to reach us.
In this view, alien civilizations may also decide that survival doesn’t require the costly technologies needed to colonize the galaxy. They may choose to focus on maintaining their existence within their own star systems rather than expanding beyond them.
Despite these limitations, scientists don’t entirely rule out the possibility of detecting signals from other civilizations.
While the universal technological limit may prevent large-scale galactic expansion, aliens could still send out probes similar to NASA’s Voyager 1 and 2, which have ventured into interstellar space and continue to transmit signals that can be picked up on Earth.
This new hypothesis offers one potential explanation for why our search for interstellar civilizations has so far come up empty.
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